Courses
Courses for Kids
Free study material
Offline Centres
More
Store Icon
Store

Myocardium Structure and Function in the Human Heart

share icon
share icon
banner

What Is the Myocardium Definition Structure and Role

Muscles are the basic units of our skeletal system. The function of muscles is to contract and go back to shape. Most of the muscles occur in pairs so that their functioning is complementary to each other. When one muscle contracts, the other muscle relaxes. For that, these muscles need energy. These muscles utilize the ATP produced within their tissues with the help of oxygen. 'Myo' is a Greek-origin root word meaning muscles. Scientifically, muscles' ability to contract is called my propulsion, or the tissues are called my propulsive tissues.

The origin of muscles is called myogenesis, and it occurs during embryonic development. The difference between muscle tissues and other tissues is in the presence of contractile protein in muscle tissues. These contractile proteins are called actin and myosin. These proteins contract and relax to cause the movement of muscles. There are other muscle proteins present in the muscles. These are regulatory proteins. These are tropomyosin and troponin.


Different Types of Muscles in Human

There are three types of muscles. Striated muscles (skeletal muscles), non-striated muscles (smooth muscles), and cardiac muscles (Myocardium). Skeletal muscles are connected to the bones and contribute to most parts of the body. The major movement of limbs is caused by the contraction and relaxation of skeletal muscles. Skeletal muscles are voluntary muscles that mean these are connected with the Central Nervous System. Other forms of muscles are smooth muscles. Smooth muscles are non-striated muscles, and these are involuntary muscles. These constitute the walls of organs and structures such as the urethra, uterus, bladder, blood vessels, oesophagus, stomach, intestine, bronchi, etc.


(Image will be uploaded soon)


What is The Myocardium of Heart?

To answer the question of what is myocardium we can say that it is the involuntary muscles and striated muscles. This means we cannot control its function as it is controlled by ANS (Autonomous Nervous System).

Let us first understand the layers of the heart wall. The heart wall is constituted of three layers. Endocardium, myocardium, and pericardium. The inner wall is called the endocardium; the middle layer and outer layers are the myocardium and pericardium, respectively. The middle layer, the myocardium, is very thick, and it is supplied with blood via the coronary circulatory system. 


Functions of Myocardium

The cardiac muscles are joined together with intercalated discs. So, in brief, cardiac muscles consist of individual heart muscle cells, cardiomyocytes connected by intercalated discs to work a single unit. The cardiac muscle cells are covered with collagen fibers and other substances. These substances form the extracellular matrix. The cardiac muscles are not very different from skeletal muscle, although there are some little differences. Its functioning principle is electrical stimulation. Electrical stimulation, also called 'cardiac action potential,' stimulates and triggers the tissue to release calcium from the sarcoplasmic reticulum. 

The sarcoplasmic reticulum is the calcium store of muscle cells. When the concentration of calcium increases, it causes the myofilaments present in the myocardial cells to slide onto each other. This process is called excitation-contraction coupling. This is what myocardium of heart is, and this is how myocardium functions. There are no layers of the myocardium.

There are some diseases related to the myocardium. Ischemia, myocardial infarction, etc., are prominent among them. Ischemia is the reduction of blood flow to the heart muscles resulting in a lack of oxygen to the muscles. This is reversible, in which the tissues can be recovered once the blood flow resumes, or it can be irreversible, causing permanent death of tissues. There can be acute Ischemia, which is the sudden reduction of blood flow to the myocardium tissue. This is a stage which is called stunned myocardium. There also can be chronic Ischemia, in which the blood flow gets reduced slowly over some time. This stage of myocardium is called hibernating myocardium, where it looks like myocardium is hibernating and performing its work very slowly. This disease can be deadly.

The heart is a major part of our body. It is the heart of the body. So, it is imperative to take good care of our hearts. This discomfort sometimes feels like heartburn. There are other symptoms as well. These symptoms include shortness of breath, cold sweat, and feeling like fainting, nausea. The risk factors are if the person was smoking or diabetic, had high blood pressure, lacked exercise, obesity, the chances are a little higher.

The most common form of diagnosis is performing an ECG. In India, there is a general temperament of avoiding doctors unless it is very urgent. This should be discouraged. Everybody should check and take note of their Blood pressure from time to time and perform ECG from time to time and check the status of the heart when you pass fifty years of age. 

Most heart diseases show symptoms very late or have an immediate and devastating effect. so we should check-up from time to time so that heart diseases can be diagnosed before time.

Want to read offline? download full PDF here
Download full PDF
Is this page helpful?
like-imagedislike-image

FAQs on Myocardium Structure and Function in the Human Heart

1. What is the myocardium?

The myocardium is the thick, muscular middle layer of the heart wall responsible for pumping blood throughout the body. It is composed of specialized cardiac muscle tissue that contracts rhythmically and involuntarily.

  • Located between the endocardium (inner layer) and epicardium (outer layer).
  • Contains interconnected cardiac muscle cells called cardiomyocytes.
  • Generates the force needed for systemic and pulmonary circulation.

2. What is the function of the myocardium?

The main function of the myocardium is to contract and pump blood out of the heart. Its rhythmic contractions enable effective blood circulation.

  • Left ventricular myocardium pumps oxygenated blood to the body.
  • Right ventricular myocardium pumps deoxygenated blood to the lungs.
  • Works through coordinated electrical impulses from the cardiac conduction system.

3. How is the myocardium different from other muscle tissues?

The myocardium is made of cardiac muscle, which is structurally and functionally distinct from skeletal and smooth muscle. It combines features of both but is unique to the heart.

  • Has striations like skeletal muscle.
  • Contracts involuntarily like smooth muscle.
  • Cells are connected by intercalated discs for synchronized contraction.

4. Where is the myocardium located in the heart?

The myocardium is located between the inner endocardium and the outer epicardium in the heart wall. It forms the thickest layer of the heart.

  • Thickest in the left ventricle due to higher pumping pressure.
  • Thinner in the atria and right ventricle.
  • Surrounded externally by the pericardium.

5. What is myocardium made of?

The myocardium is primarily made of specialized cardiac muscle cells called cardiomyocytes. These cells are adapted for continuous, rhythmic contraction.

  • Contain abundant mitochondria for high energy production.
  • Connected by intercalated discs with gap junctions.
  • Supplied with oxygen by the coronary arteries.

6. Why is the myocardium thicker in the left ventricle?

The myocardium is thicker in the left ventricle because it must generate higher pressure to pump blood to the entire body. Systemic circulation requires more force than pulmonary circulation.

  • Left ventricle pumps blood into the aorta.
  • Right ventricle only pumps to the nearby lungs.
  • Greater muscle mass produces stronger contractions.

7. How does the myocardium receive oxygen and nutrients?

The myocardium receives oxygen and nutrients through the coronary circulation. Blood is supplied by the right and left coronary arteries.

  • Coronary arteries branch from the aorta.
  • Deliver oxygen-rich blood to cardiac muscle cells.
  • Blockage can lead to myocardial infarction (heart attack).

8. What is myocardial infarction?

A myocardial infarction is the death of a portion of the myocardium due to blocked blood supply. It is commonly known as a heart attack.

  • Usually caused by blockage of a coronary artery.
  • Leads to oxygen deprivation and tissue damage.
  • Can impair the heart’s pumping ability.

9. What are intercalated discs in the myocardium?

Intercalated discs are specialized junctions that connect cardiac muscle cells in the myocardium. They allow synchronized contraction of the heart muscle.

  • Contain gap junctions for electrical impulse transmission.
  • Contain desmosomes for strong mechanical attachment.
  • Enable the myocardium to function as a coordinated unit.

10. Can the myocardium regenerate after injury?

The myocardium has very limited ability to regenerate after injury. Damaged cardiac muscle is usually replaced by scar tissue.

  • Cardiomyocytes have low mitotic activity.
  • Scar tissue reduces contractile efficiency.
  • This limitation contributes to chronic heart failure after severe injury.


Competitive Exams after 12th Science
tp-imag
bottom-arrow
tp-imag
bottom-arrow
tp-imag
bottom-arrow
tp-imag
bottom-arrow
tp-imag
bottom-arrow
tp-imag
bottom-arrow